*WE ARE WITNESSING A NEW RENAISSANCE
AND GOLD IS READY FOR $1,000/OZ
*by John Lee, CFA
Portfolio Manager, Mau Capital
August 3, 2009

 http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/lee/2009/0803.html



This is a follow up to the *Q1 2009 Summary On Gold And Various Markets *
issued* *on March 31, 2009 http://new.goldmau.com/article.php?id=1610
In the first quarter of 2009, we reached the climax of US banking collapse.
Global central banks hurried to apply fiscal and monetary stimulus,
including unconventional “Quantitative Easing”, which entailed the printing
of over $1.5 trillion to buy troubled mortgage and derivative assets. Our
conclusion then was:

* “In Q1 we likely saw the peak of the dollar. Mr. Bernanke and Mr. Obama
continued with hyper-inflationary fiscal and monetary policies which will
spark the resumption of commodity bull. Asian markets are breaking away from
US equities, this is what we anticipated. I look to accelerated global
recovery and volatile markets, with positive uptrend ahead. **“*

Back in March, we were quite possibly the only optimist calling for the
recovery in the equity markets. The following charts demonstrate we should
have been more bullish!

So what’s in store for the rest of 2009?

*Gold:*

We said in March:

*“Fiscal deficits and record low rates will further provide momentum for
gold. The chance of reaching past $1,000/oz has been further bolstered by
oil's strong comeback at $50. For Q2 I look for range bound between $850/oz
and $1,000/oz.”*

Gold indeed took a breather while allowing commodity and equity markets to
catch up. Now with crisis talk receding, inflation and deficit concerns will
return to center stage. I look for gold to first break out of $950 by
September, and rocket past $1,000 by end of October.  Technically the above
bullish reverse head-and-shoulder pattern predicts a peak for 2009 of
$1,300-$1,500/oz

*USDX*

In March we said:

*“The dollar performed its best act and was squeezed to 89 before long term
poor fundamentals come back in to play. I look for a dollar correction that
will take the index back 80 in Q2 and 75 in 2009.”*

Our call on the dollar was spot on. The dollar looks to have just broken
down from the bearish head-of-shoulder formation, this means dollar is going
down further to 75 shortly. Because strengthening Asian currencies (other
than the yen) are not in the dollar index basket, I am not as bearish as
other analysts on the dollar index and would peg my conservative low target
of 70 in 2009.

*S&P500*

We said in March:

*“S&P500 staged a panic bottom in Q1 from banking crisis and is back trading
above 800 level. With zero% interest rate and vast money looking for a home,
we are neutral to mildly positive on the index."*

Back then we drew 1,000 as being the upside mark. The index reached that
target with ease in July. Since the fundamentals for the US economy has not
improved at all with double digit unemployment rate, this liquidity driven
rally could take a breather before the next advance. I look for index to be
range-bound between 900 to 1,150 for 2009. The lower the dollar goes, the
higher S&P500 will be.

*Gold Stocks*

We said in March:

*“The XAU zoomed to 140 in Q1, which is quite extraordinary given the
extremely poor climate in equity markets. There is a lot of resistance ahead
at 150 which will likely cap the index for Q2 while base metal and energy
sectors play catch up."*

XAU matched our call for Q2 as it zig-zag’ed its way to 150. With gold
primed for a major breakout, XAU presents the lowest-risk entry point for
the year. I look for the index to take out 150 by September, with first
target being 170, then 200 by year end. I have a feeling the 200 target
could be conservative.

*Oil and Copper:*



In March we said:

*“In Q1, China started stockpiling base metals and energy markets started to
return to normalcy from extreme margin selloff. Remember, commodity prices
go up regardless of economic activities in times of inflation, just ask the
Zimbabweans with 85% unemployment and a loaf of bread costing 1 trillion
Zimbabwean dollars.*

*Base metals and oil have staged very healthy gains in Q1, prompting us to
possibly raise our above target for the year. For Q2, oil is likely to be
between $40 and $60, while copper stays between $1.75 - $2.25"*

It turned out we were conservative in our already optimistic call for oil
and copper. Given those two growth commodities have doubled from the 2009, I
would be cautious to step in at this point. The lows I see for oil is $50’s
and for copper is low $2’s. I am cashing out copper producers, rotating to
gold and copper juniors companies.

*S&P TSX Ventures Index (Proxy to Junior Mining Stocks):*

We said in March:

*“Our call here has been mostly correct. I am mildly surprised by the
relative strong performance of the junior resource sector in Q1 (up 35%).
While I don't see much downside as value plays abound, note there is strong
resistance at 1,000. “*

Investors snatched up bargains in the junior sector, which helped propel the
index to 1,200. Lots of analysts are recommending taking profits out of the
juniors. If copper nickel and gold stay above $2 and $6 and $900
respectively, we won’t see any prolonged correction in the junior sector as
there are still many bargains that are 50%-70% off from 2008 peak. I think a
better strategy is to keep a good portion of funds and rotate positions *
within* juniors. My conservative target for the index is 1,500 by year end.

*Global Equities (using Shanghai Stock Exchange Index as Proxy):*

I said in March

*“Shanghai rebounded 25% alone in Q1, faster that I anticipated. The index
has de-coupled from the US equity markets and the chart is very bullish. I
would raise my target for the index to 3,000 for the year. Buoyant Asian
equities will have a positive impact on commodity prices.”*

Again I was being too modest with my forecast. China is the most populist
country and is the world’s third largest economy, so the doubling of
Shanghai stock exchange from its Oct low is no small feast. While I don’t
see any severe prolonged correction, the chart indicates congestion between
3,500 and 4,000, which is now my upside target for 2009.

*We are entering a new renaissance:*

With the talk of financial crisis receding, the focus will be back on the
dollar. The US budget deficit is projected to reach $2 trillion in 2010. As
the generation of baby boomers enters the entitlement phase, the deficit
will only likely to go higher. Medicare spending for the first time exceeded
contribution, and the Medicare trust fund became a net seller of US treasury
instead of being a contributor. While the budget deficit situation is
alarming, what concerns me the most is the waning appetite of foreign
investors on dollar debts. Dollar debts owned by foreign investors currently
stand at over $12 trillion. China, Brazil, India, and Russian are explicitly
warning US to reign in deficits to save the dollar. I wonder when their
patience will run out.

The dollar standard lasted 4 decades and channeled 70% of the world’s
resources and investment to America, a country with 5% of the world
population.

The jettison of the dollar standard will ensure uniformed distribution of
wealth and investment throughout the world. I would boldly state that the
global growth will accelerate as we enter a new renaissance with industrial
and hi-tech revolution that will put the 1900’s industrial revolution to
shame.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"

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